|
BLACK BOY
The Autobiography of Richard
Wright
Adapted For The Screen
(Web version in nonstandard
format)
Copyright © 1998
- FADE IN:
-
- EXT. MISSISSIPPI - SHARECROPPER SHANTY
TOWN - DAWN - 1914
-
- This could be a third world country.
-
- What was once a forest is now cut clear,
mainly stumps and
- eroding red soil. Several shacks huddle
near a dirt road
- going nowhere. Weak trails of smoke
drift from tin-pipe
- chimneys. Thin steam oozes from a single
roadside outhouse.
-
- At the nearest shack a very old black
man sits on a stump,
- the young sunrise dull in his cataract
eyes. Near him is an
- ancient wagon; broken, rusted, dismembered.
-
- At the end of the aimless road is a
small, ramshackle shanty.
-
- Framed in a single window, a silky
white backdrop behind, is
- the face of an attractive black boy,
about six.
-
-
-
- INT. SHANTY - SAME TIME
-
- The walls and furniture are made of
rough, unpainted wood.
-
- In a still dark bedroom, a large black
man in his thirties,
- NATE WRIGHT, snores loudly amidst shabby
linens.
-
- In what passes for a kitchen, his wife,
ELLA, about 30, toils
- at a pot-bellied stove.
-
- In a living area, a small space, the
faint light of dawn is
- piercing porous walls. A blaze smolders
in a makeshift
- fireplace. A small boy about five,
LEON WRIGHT, lays on his
- side and watches the fading fire.
-
- In this dark interior there is only
one bright element.
- Flowing with the breeze at the single
window, long, white,
- silky curtains envelope the six-year-old
boy, RICHARD WRIGHT.
- He kneels, his arms crossed on the
splintered sill, and looks
- out the window to the branch of a dying
tree a few feet away.
-
- Behind him, his younger brother speaks.
-
- LEON
- It ain't gonna come.
-
- Richard ignores him.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- It ain't.
-
- RICHARD
- You shut up.
-
- LEON
- You shut up.
-
- Richard stares at the branch. In a
flash of color a cardinal
- lands. He is a beautiful, brilliant
red bird with full,
- lustrous plumage. Richard's eyes and
mouth go wide and he
- inhales sharply.
-
- Leon stirs and joins Richard at the
window. The boys just
- stare for a long moment.
-
- RICHARD
- (quiet)
- Hello, birdy.
-
- The cardinal, as if it heard him, turns
to Richard. It peeps.
-
- RICHARD
- (continuing; gleeful)
- Wooooooooooooh!
-
- Leon backs away suddenly. Ella rushes
into the room, hurries
- up to Richard, pulls him from the window
and the bird flies.
-
- ELLA
- (whispering, urgent)
- You hush-up! Do you want to wake
- your father?!
-
- Richard, knowing the threat, shakes
his head. Ella releases
- her grip and moves back to the kitchen.
She stops short and
- whispers forcefully.
-
- ELLA
- (continuing)
- And you keep your dirty-self away
- from your granny's curtains. I
- ain't gonna tell you again.
-
- Ella returns to the kitchen.
-
- Hereafter, when the boys speak they
whisper.
-
- LEON
- Hah. You got in trouble.
-
- Richard looks at his younger brother,
but says nothing.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- You got in trouble, ya, ya.
-
- Now Richard begins to advance slowly
towards his brother.
- Leon's brow rises and he backs off.
-
- LEON
- (continuing;
- exclaiming whisper)
- Don't you start nothin'! You'll
- get a whippin'!
-
- Richard follows as Leon picks up speed
and begins to move
- here and there in the small room. He
is backed into a
- corner. Behind him leans a tattered
broom, sparse in straw.
- Leon snatches up the broom and holds
it like a bat.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- I'll hit ya'!
-
- Richard readies himself, feints a leap,
Leon takes a half-
- hearted swing, Richard snatches the
broom. Leon makes a
- break but Richard cuts him off at the
fireplace.
-
- Richard holds the broom as if deciding
what punishment to
- meat out. Then he thrusts it into the
fire and the few
- remaining straws ignite. Richard looks
to an aghast Leon.
-
- RICHARD
- Yeeeeeaaaah.
-
- Richard thrust the weak torch out as
if to pin Leon, but
- stops short. Wide-eyed, the smaller
boy gasps and makes a
- break. Richard cuts him off and gives
another feint. Leon
- breaks again and again Richard heads
him off.
-
- Leon is backed up to the curtains.
The thin fabric floats in
- the breeze, as if reaching out. The
torch is now just a weak
- glow near the bundled base of straw.
-
- Richard feints to the left, Leon jumps
right. Leon dashes
- left, Richard swings the broom fast
to follow. The movement
- of air ignites the bundled straw, it
flares, the curtains
- reach and... Fwooooom! The silky shear
fabric inflames.
-
- Richard drops the broom and both boys
back away facing a
- billowing sheet of fire. The brothers
are open mouthed, wide-
- eyed, in shock, but also fascinated.
-
- The flames are beautiful; moving with
the flowing, consumed
- fabric. The fire reaches up and eats
into the dry, bare wood
- of the ceiling. And still the boys
stand. Their eyes rise
- with the fire. They watch the flames
spread like liquid
- across the ceiling above.
-
- LEON
- (quiet, calm)
- Ooh, Richard. You gonna git a
- spankin'.
-
- Suddenly, they break, frantic, and
run in opposite directions.
-
- Ella is in the kitchen at the basin
when Richard tears in.
- She snaps her head up.
-
- He stops, turns and runs back into
the living room as Leon
- runs past into the kitchen.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- Mama-Mama-Mama-Mama...
-
- Ella stares at the boy. Then her gaze
turns up as a finger
- of smoke reaches into the kitchen.
Her mouth drops.
-
-
-
- EXT. SHANTY
-
- Smoke is billowing from the roof-line.
-
- Richard blasts from the front door.
He starts for the road,
- stops, turns, starts for the house,
stops, turns, starts for
- road, stops, turns, runs back to the
house and dives
- underneath.
-
- In perhaps a foot of crawl space, Richard
propels himself
- back through dirt and debris. A cat
hisses and scuttles
- away. Richard is frantic. Overhead,
his mother screams.
-
- ELLA (O.S.)
- Fiiiire!! Nate! Fiiiire!!
-
- Richard gives a whimper and pushes
farther back, nearly to
- the back of the house. Footsteps are
booming through the
- planks above. From out front, shouts
are heard down the road.
-
- Directly above, footsteps hammer, a
creaky screen door slams
- open and the legs and feet of Nate,
Ella and Leon appear in
- the back yard. Others are joining them.
The 25 other
- residents of the shanty town hurry
onto the scene.
-
- In the yard, Ella is beginning to turn,
spinning, looking
- frantically for her son.
-
- ELLA
- Richard... Richard! Richard!!
-
- She runs to the edge of the house and
looks underneath. From
- under the house, Richard sees her face
peering inward. He
- buries his head and grips a post. Not
seeing him, she rises
- and backs into the yard.
-
- ELLA
- (continuing)
- Richard! The house is on fire...
- Oh, please, find my child!!
-
- Under the house, Richard whimpers.
Nate's face suddenly
- appears. He continues to stare and
his eyes adjust.
-
- NATE
- There he is!
-
- RICHARD
- Naw!
-
- NATE
- Come here, boy!
-
- RICHARD
- Naw!
-
- NATE
- The house is on fire!
-
- RICHARD
- Leave me 'lone!
-
- NATE
- Git out of there! You gonna burn
- up!
-
- RICHARD
- No! Can't you hear? I told you,
- leave me 'lone!
-
- NATE
- Goddamn your little ass! Git out
- here!
-
- RICHARD
- No!
-
- Cursing, Nate jams his big body under
the house and grabs
- Richard by the leg. Nate pulls, but
Richard hugs tight to
- the post, desperately fighting back.
Nate pulls harder.
-
- RICHARD
- (continuing)
- Leave me 'lone!!
-
- Finally, Nate heaves and Richard's
grip is broken. The boy
- is dragged backward as he grabs at
the loose earth and
- screams.
-
- NATE
- Come outta there, you little fool!
-
- RICHARD
- Turn me loose!
-
- Nate yanks Richard from under the house
and throws him. The
- boy sails through the air for about
seven feet and lands
- hard. He stays still, flat on the ground,
whimpering.
-
- The other black sharecroppers are watching
the fire,
- entranced.
-
- Ella grabs Richard hard by the ear
and forces him to his
- feet. He is beyond crying out.
-
- The mother hauls her son to a wooden
barrel which lays on its
- side underneath a thin weeping willow.
She strips off his
- shirt and forces him across the barrel.
-
- She reaches up to the tree and begins
to tear at a bare, low-
- hanging branch. The branch is tough
and she must pull hard
- with both hands. Finally, it peels
off; four-feet of hard,
- whip-like wood.
-
- Two women stand just behind, ignoring
the fire, watching
- Ella. Ella looks up at the women.
-
- ELLA
- (strangely calm)
- Boy liked to scared us to death.
-
- The branch rises high in the smoky,
dawn sky and viciously
- flashes down... whiiip-slap! Richard
screams. The branch
- rises again... whiiip-slap! Richard
screams... whiiip-slap!
- Richard screams... whiiip-slap!
-
- The house caves-in on itself with a
flurry of sparks.
- Already, the old rotted wood a fast-burning
fuel, it smolders.
-
- The sun is full and fiery. The sharecroppers
stand now as if
- warming themselves. The branch rises
again... whiiip-slap!
- Richard no longer screams.
-
-
-
-
-
- EXT. SHARECROPPER SHANTY TOWN - DUSK
-
- What was once the Wright home is a
black spot on the earth.
-
- A wagon, pulled by an old mule and
its wheels barely
- attached, is heading off down the rutted
road toward a barren
- landscape. Nate is at the reins. Ella
and Leon walk
- alongside. In the back, Richard is
wrapped in an old
- blanket. He seems feverish, maybe delirious.
-
- A few loitering children watch as the
wagon creaks past.
-
- NARRATOR
- (an adult Richard)
- I was lashed so hard and long that
- I lost consciousness. I was
- beaten out of my senses.
- (pause)
- For a long time after that day, I
- was chastened whenever I
- remembered that my mother had come
- close to killing me.
-
- Beyond the shanty town, the family
moves slowly forward.
-
-
-
- EXT. MEMPHIS CITY STREETS - EARLY MORNING
-
- In the hot humid haze the black section
of this urban
- Southern city appears almost medieval.
Buildings constructed
- in the 1800's decay, but there is life
on the street.
-
- A milk wagon grinds down the pot-holed,
earthen avenue
- passing only black faces. Some residents
linger on stoops
- and corners, others make their way
to work. Mainly, the
- women who trudge along are dressed
as maids or cooks; the men
- are in overalls and work boots.
-
- The wagon rattles to a stop in front
of a row of tenement
- houses. The driver drops to the street
with a basket of
- milk, passes one house by and crosses
an alley to deliver
- next door.
-
- Down this garbage-filled, dead-end
alley alongside the
- neglected house, there is a single
window, filthy, barely
- transparent. But very close, on the
other side of the dirty
- glass, a spindly, alien shape moves.
A roach, seemingly
- magnified, makes its way along the
glass.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHTS' TENEMENT - BOYS' BEDROOM
- SAME TIME
-
- Seen through the clearing fog of waking
eyes, on a dirty
- window looking over an alley, a cockroach
feels about. It's
- huge; a good two inches, moving slow,
long feelers extended
- out, twitching.
-
- It is Richard who watches the roach.
It is just above where
- his head rests on a ragged pillow.
He clears his eyes and
- watches as the roach flutters it's
membrane wings.
-
- At either side of the small, dingy
room, the boys, not much
- older, are on old, very small mattresses.
-
- LEON
- Kill it!
-
- RICHARD
- You shut up.
-
- LEON
- Kill that thing. It's dirty.
-
- RICHARD
- You dirty.
-
- LEON
- Ain't. You dirty.
-
- The roach moves toward the crack between
window and sill.
-
- RICHARD
- Shut up.
-
- Richard reaches up and shuts the window
before the roach can
- exit. It stops, then crawls along the
sill.
-
- LEON
- You crazy, Richard.
-
- Richard reaches to the floor next him,
grabs an empty mason
- jar, moves to a kneeling position and
slams the jar over the
- insect. The roach comes to life, popping
about in the jar,
- fluttering its wings.
-
- Leon gets up and moves closer to examine
the trapped bug.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- That's a big one.
-
- Richard watches the bug for a moment,
then, suddenly, he
- jerks the jar up and moves to clap
his hand over the opening.
- But the roach is too fast. It goes
airborne, flying. Leon
- scrambles back.
-
- ROACH'S POV:
-
- -- Flying, closing fast on Leon. Leon's
eyes go wide, his
- mouth opens to scream...
-
- Plop. The fat bug lands square on Leon's
forehead.
-
- LEON
- (continuing)
- Ahhhhhhhhh!!
-
- Leon leaps into the air, swiping furiously
at his face, yanks
- open the door and runs screaming from
the room.
-
-
-
- INT. LIVING ROOM
-
- Leon tears into the small and dingy
space screaming, spinning
- about, swiping at his face.
-
- LEON
- Mama-Mama-Mama-Mama-Mama!!
-
- Ella runs from the kitchen and moves
to the boy.
-
- ELLA
- Boy! What is it?
-
- LEON
- A roach, a roach... Richard threw
- a roach on me!
-
- NATE (O.S.)
- Gooooddammmmmn! What's that
- fuuuuuckin' noise out there?!
-
- Leon shudders and immediately goes
quiet.
-
- The door to the parents room slams
open. Nate stands there
- in old pajama bottoms, his gut hanging
out.
-
- NATE
- I'm sleepin' damn ya'! What're you
- makin' that noise for, you little
- sonofabitch?!
-
- Leon looks to his father. The boy is
terrified, speechless.
- His mother says nothing.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- Boy, I ain't gonna ask you again!
-
- LEON
- Uh-uh-I-Richard-Richard-I...
-
- Nate turns to the boys' room.
-
- NATE
- Richard! Get your ass out here!
-
- Richard appears from around the bedroom
doorway. He stays
- quiet, but moves determinedly into
the room.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- Get over here!
-
- Ella and Leon stand together, knowing
what's coming. Richard
- moves closer to his father.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- You know I'm sleepin'!
-
- RICHARD
- Yeah.
-
- NATE
- Don't you yeah me, boy!
-
- RICHARD
- Yes, sir.
-
- NATE
- Turn 'round!
-
- Richard turns around. His face shows
he's steeling for the
- blow. Nate kicks out hard, strikes
Richard in the rear. A
- squelching gasp escapes the boy as
he is catapulted off the
- ground. He falls hard into the wall
and crumples.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- Next time you be makin' a fuss
- 'round here, you jest think 'bout
- that sore ass you gonna have!
-
- Nate starts back for his bedroom, stops
and turns to his wife.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- Get me my breakfast.
-
- He enters the room and slams the door.
-
- Richard rises from the floor. Behind
him, Leon and his
- mother watch. Stoic, Richard walks
into his room.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHT HOME - KITCHEN - LATER
-
- Leon and Nate are at the table. Nate
is dressed in the
- uniform of a hotel janitor. Ella is
cooking. Four eggs pop-
- away sunny-side-up in a cast-iron pan
full of bacon grease.
-
- Sweating, Ella turns from the old stove,
walks to Nate and
- ladles the greasy eggs out to join
his huge plate of bacon
- and grits. She goes to the stove then
returns to spoon some
- grits to Leon's plate.
-
- Nate breaks the eggs into his grits,
crumbles the bacon and
- begins to chop at the yellow-brown
mass with a fork. He
- begins to heap great gobs of the slurry
into his mouth.
-
-
-
- EXT. BACK ALLEY OF WRIGHTS' TENEMENT
- SAME TIME
-
- Dressed in ragged clothes and cinching
his belt, Richard is
- nearly to the back door of the home.
He wipes his hands on
- his shorts.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHT HOME - KITCHEN
-
- Richard does not quite enter the room.
He leans against the
- door frame and watches his father,
hunched over, piling food
- into his mouth. Stuffing the last of
a biscuit into his face,
- Nate glances up at the boy, then goes
back to his food.
-
- RICHARD
- Can I have some milk?
-
- ELLA
- Sit down, boy.
-
- Richard moves to the table and sits
across from his father.
- Nate reaches for another biscuit.
-
- RICHARD
- Can I get some milk?
-
- ELLA
- We ain't got no milk. The man
- stopped deliverin'.
-
- RICHARD
- Why?
-
- Ella doesn't respond as she ladles
some grits into a bowl.
-
- RICHARD
- (continuing)
- Why the milk man don't come?
-
- Through a mouthful of food, Nate speaks.
-
- NATE
- Never you mind, boy.
-
- Ella puts the bowl of grits in front
of Richard. Richard
- looks up, as if expecting more.
-
- RICHARD
- Can I have some eggs and bacon?
-
- Ella is at the sink, her head turned
away. She turns and
- gives Richard a stern look before answering.
-
- ELLA
- (quiet)
- Ain't no more.
-
- Nate is shoveling hard at the last
few bites of his food.
-
- NATE
- Boy, you want to eat in this
- house, you make sure to get your
- shufflin' black ass to the table
- at meal time. Ain't nobody gonna
- come lookin' for you to eat.
-
- Richard looks hard at his father for
a moment.
-
- RICHARD
- But I'm hungry.
-
- Nate laughs.
-
- NATE
- Boy, look at the size of you! Now
- look at the size of me. You get
- to be my size and a workin' man,
- you need food.
-
- Nate reaches for the last biscuit,
tears it in half and
- throws a part to the table in front
of Richard.
-
- NATE
- (continuing)
- You don't need but a little. You
- just a skinny thing, don't need
- much of nothin'.
-
- RICHARD
- But I'm hungry.
-
- Nate glares.
-
- RICHARD
- (continuing)
- I'm always hungry.
-
- Nate's stern look drops and he laughs;
a guffaw.
-
- NATE
- Well you just best get out and get
- yourself a job then, boy. Ain't
- no free rides in this world.
-
- Richard looks grimly back at his father.
The man gobbles a
- few last bites, pops the biscuit into
his mouth, pushes back
- from the table and runs a hand across
his bulging gut. He
- belches, gets up, takes his hat from
the table and starts for
- the front room.
-
- ELLA
- Nate?
-
- NATE
- Yeah?
-
- ELLA
- You got bread money?
-
- Nate ignores Ella, walks from the room.
Ella drops a
- dishrag, grabs a hand towel and follows,
drying her hands.
-
-
-
- INT. LIVING ROOM
-
- Nate is almost to the door when Ella
catches up to him.
-
- ELLA
- When you gonna' be home?
-
- NATE
- I dunno. What business it of
- yours?
-
- There's a long pause as Ella registers
hurt, maybe anger.
-
-
-
- INT. KITCHEN
-
- Richard and Leon overhear the voices
of their parents.
- Richard looks disturbed, but also resigned.
-
- ELLA (O.S.)
- You ain't been home before
- midnight for three days. And you
- all liquored-up.
-
- NATE (O.S.)
- Woman, I got me a hard job and I
- need me some time.
-
- ELLA
- What do you do after work?
-
- NATE
- You know better than to ax me
- questions. What gettin' into you,
- woman?
-
- ELLA
- Don't leave when I'm talkin' to
- you.
-
- NATE
- Who you think you talking to? You
- don't give me no orders, bitch.
-
- ELLA
- You... You... You nothin' but a
- whorein' 'round drunk!
-
- Richard's face registers pain even
before the blow comes...
- a chair overturns, a body hits the
floor. The front door
- slams.
-
- The boys sit, silent. From the other
room, the brothers can
- hear their mother sobbing softly.
-
- NARRATOR
- We did not understand what had
- happened between our father and
- our mother.
- (pause)
- Whenever we asked why father had
- left, she would tell us that we
- were too young to know.
-
-
-
- EXT. MEMPHIS - BLACK SECTION - CITY
STREET - DAY
-
- A group of ten boys, including Richard,
are running down the
- sidewalk. They weave between pedestrians,
leap to the
- street, dodge an old truck, startle
a horse and leap back on
- the walks.
-
- They tear through fruit carts and white
vendors. Richard is
- one of the smaller and younger of the
boys by a couple of
- years. His face shows some exhilaration
at the play, and the
- power of numbers.
-
- They slow and begin to loiter near
a group of about six
- carts. The vendors may be Jewish. The
gang, including
- Richard, sing-out in unison.
-
- BOYS
- Red, white and blue, your pa was
- a Jew! Your ma a dirty Dago, what
- the hell is you!
-
- The boys laugh. The vendors just stare.
-
- The larger of the boys dashes up to
a cart, grabs an apple
- and runs. The rest of the gang howls
and suddenly a line of
- screaming vendors is under assault.
The boys scramble around
- a cart, grab apples and oranges and
tear off to the next cart.
-
- Richard, still at the curb, has stopped
in his tracks. He
- watches as the gang pillages, moving
in and out like fast
- little animals dodging the reeling
vendors. A few boys grab
- too much and fruit falls to the ground.
-
- The gang runs. Richard hesitates, unsure,
then he follows.
-
-
-
- EXT. ALLEY - LATER
-
- The boys sit on crates and cans and
lean against the wall
- eating their loot. Apples crunch between
teeth, orange pulp
- oozes from greedy mouths.
-
- Richard, not eating, seems apart. He
tosses small rocks a
- few feet to nowhere and looks down.
The larger boy, BOOTH,
- gives Richard a long look.
-
- BOOTH
- Hey!
-
- Richard looks up with a start, realizing
the older boy is
- speaking to him.
-
- BOOTH
- (continuing)
- How come you got nothin'?
-
- Richard pauses, not sure how to answer.
-
- RICHARD
- I dunno.
-
- BOOTH
- You don't know?! Shit boy, we all
- got somethin' to eat, why didn't
- you?
-
- Richard seems like he might respond,
but changes his mind.
-
- RICHARD
- I dunno.
-
- Booth takes the last bite of his apple
and stares at Richard.
- The larger boy throws the core down
the alley.
-
- BOOTH
- You best talk, boy, you want to be
- part of my gang.
-
- Richard turns and stares up at Booth
about ten feet away.
-
- RICHARD
- I just didn't want to, that's all.
-
- BOOTH
- You didn't want to?! What you
- problem, nigger, don't you eat?!
- That why you such a skinny thang?
-
- The gang laughs.
-
- GANG BOY
- Get on that boy, Booth!
-
- RICHARD
- I just didn't want to steal.
-
- Booth and the gang force a jeering
laugh.
-
- BOOTH
- Oh, you Miss-ippi boys don't like
- to steal! Tha's right, you don't
- like to steal and you fuck your
- grannies, too!
-
- Richard springs to his feet, but Booth
is already moving for
- him. The other boys have come to their
feet and are crowding
- around. Taller and heavier, Booth leans
into Richard.
-
- BOOTH
- (continuing)
- You want to take up against me,
- boy, come on!
-
- Richard looks up into the boy's mean
eyes and knows it is
- hopeless. Booth gives a hard push and
Richard stumbles
- backward. Booth rolls shoulders like
a fighter loosening-up.
-
- BOOTH
- (continuing)
- Come on girlie, I'll fix you up
- good!
-
- Richard looks from Booth to the expectant,
excited faces of
- the gang. Slowly, he turns and walks
to the alley exit.
-
- In unison, the boys half taunt and
half groan their
- disappointment.
-
- BOOTH
- (continuing)
- Yeaaaaa-yeaaaaa! Go on Miss-ippi!
- Go on home to your mama!
-
-
-
- EXT. MEMPHIS CITY STREETS - NIGHT
-
- It may be Saturday night. A good number
of pedestrians and
- vehicles fill the streets and walks.
-
- Richard wanders the sidewalk. Black
people, as well as
- working-class whites, exit and enter
bars and diners.
- Richard, a young boy alone, is out
of place.
-
- He pauses near the open doors of a
particularly noisy saloon.
- He leans to the wall and peers around
the frame to the
- inside. The dark, smoky interior is
filled with shadowy
- figures. They bring glasses to mouths,
talk and laugh
- loudly. Most are drunk.
-
- Richard is wary, but fascinated.
-
- Just inside the door, a few feet to
the side of Richard's
- view, a large round black face turns
and stares at the boy.
-
- BAR MAN
- (drunk)
- Heyyyyy, younnngin'!
-
- Richard gives a start, sees the man
and freezes.
-
- BAR MAN
- (continuing)
- Come on innnn! I got somethin'
- for ya'!
-
- Richard bolts.
-
- He is a block away before he turns
and slows to a walk.
-
- He nears the bright facade of an ice
cream parlour. He looks
- into the ornate windows. Inside, a
red-haired boy, about
- ten, sits in a booth across from his
parents. The freckle-
- faced boy is devouring an enormous
ice cream sunday. He
- shovels great spoonfuls into his mouth.
-
- As if attempting to eat vicariously,
Richard leans against
- the building and watches the boy consume.
Richard seems
- close to drooling. He holds his stomach.
After a long
- moment he turns and continues, aimlessly,
down the street.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHT TENEMENT - BOYS' ROOM -
MORNING
-
- Richard is tying up decayed boots.
He doesn't look well;
- weak, a yellow cast beneath his dark
skin. He finishes
- lacing his boots, slowly gets to his
feet. He pauses. His
- stomach grumbles loudly. He heads into
the living area.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHTS' LIVING ROOM
-
- Richard walks to where his mother is
ironing. Leon is
- tinkering at her feet.
-
- RICHARD
- Mama, I'm hungry.
-
- ELLA
- (chuckling)
- Then you best jump up and grab a
- kungry.
-
- RICHARD
- (pause; puzzled)
- What's a kungry?
-
- ELLA
- It's what little boys eat when
- they get hungry.
-
- RICHARD
- What's it taste like?
-
- ELLA
- I don't know.
-
- RICHARD
- Then why you tell me to catch one?
-
- ELLA
- (smiling)
- Because you said that you were
- hungry.
-
- Richard is dismayed, becoming angry.
-
- RICHARD
- Mama, I'm hungry! I wanna eat!
-
- ELLA
- There's nothing to eat.
-
- RICHARD
- Why?
-
- ELLA
- Just because there's none.
-
- Richards eyes are beginning to well-up.
-
- RICHARD
- But I wanna' eat!
-
- ELLA
- You'll just have to wait.
-
- RICHARD
- For what?
-
- ELLA
- For God to send some food.
-
- RICHARD
- (pause)
- But I'm hungry!
-
- Ella stops her ironing. She turns to
Richard. She wipes
- tears from her eyes, sighs.
-
- ELLA
- Where's your father?
-
- RICHARD
- I dunno.
-
- ELLA
- Who always brought food into this
- house?
-
- RICHARD
- (pause)
- Papa.
-
- ELLA
- Well, your father isn't here now.
-
- RICHARD
- Where is he?
-
- Ella gives a great heave and stifles
a sob.
-
- ELLA
- I don't know.
-
- RICHARD
- (whimpers)
- But I'm hungry.
-
- ELLA
- You'll just have to wait for the
- Good Lord to provide.
-
- Richard stares at his mother.
-
-
-
- INT. MEMPHIS COURTROOM - DAY
-
- Flags hang from staffs at either side
of the bench -- one is
- the Stars and Stripes; the other is
the Confederate.
-
- A smattering of people fill the rows
of wooden chairs.
- Blacks sit on one side of the room,
whites on the other.
- This segregation includes some ten
or twelve mainly black
- defendants.
-
- A uniformed bailiff stands at the front
of the room near the
- bench. A prim, female court stenographer
sits a level below
- and near the judge.
-
- The JUDGE is young, about 30. He is
a choir boy; too clean-
- cut, baby-faced with his hair slicked
and parted. He could
- be the mayor's son-in-law.
-
- Ella, with her sons clutched at either
side, faces the bench
- at the front of the room.
-
- Nate, slouching, with a stupid grin
on his face, stands a few
- feet away also facing the Judge. He
could be half-drunk.
-
- Perhaps idly, the Judge scratches a
feather pen across
- something on his desk. Seeming bored,
he raises his gaze to
- Nate, a man several years older.
-
- JUDGE
- Now see here, son. Your wifey
- here says you up 'n left her with
- two hungry boys to feed. What you
- got to say for yourself?
-
- Nate doesn't seem to understand. He
shuffles his feet for a
- pause. When he speaks, it is fluent
Uncle Tom.
-
- NATE
- Whas' that, Sah?
-
- JUDGE
- Hey now! You address this here
- bench as 'Your Honour', boy!
-
- NATE
- Yes, sir... you honor.
-
- There is a pause as the Judge gives
Nate a stern look.
-
- JUDGE
- Well?
-
- NATE
- You honor?
-
- JUDGE
- (losing patience)
- This your wife and boys?
-
- NATE
- Yes 'em, you honor.
-
- JUDGE
- Well, did you up 'n leave?
-
- NATE
- Yes 'em, you honor.
-
- JUDGE
- You got some kind of good reason
- why you would desert your wife and
- children?
-
- NATE
- Sah?
-
- JUDGE
- Why did you leave your wife?
-
- NATE
- Oh! 'cause you honor, I got me a
- new gal!
-
- Seeming to stew, the Judge looks like
he might let Nate have
- it. Then, suddenly, the soft-faced
man grins wide, he throws
- back his head and guffaws loud and
long.
-
- The Judge turns to the now grinning
bailiff as if to share in
- the dirty joke between men. Then the
man quiets and again
- looks down at Nate, a smiling fool.
-
- JUDGE
- You get yourself a pretty one?
-
- NATE
- Oh, yeah, you honor, she's a
- good'n!
-
- Ella is totally degraded. She looks
close to vomiting.
- Richard is completely bewildered, perhaps
filling with rage.
-
- The Judge settles back and resumes
business.
-
- JUDGE
- See here now... you workin'?
-
- NATE
- Yes, you honor.
-
- JUDGE
- Doin' what?
-
- NATE
- You honor?
-
- JUDGE
- Your job. Where you work, boy?
-
- NATE
- Oh, at the Carlton Arms, you honor.
-
- JUDGE
- What do you do there?
-
- NATE
- I's the day clean-up man... the
- head clean-up man.
-
- JUDGE
- Oh, you the head clean-up man.
-
- NATE
- Yes 'em.
-
- JUDGE
- Okay, how much you give the misses
- so far to help feed these youngins?
-
- Nate shuffles his feet and smiles like
an idiot.
-
- NATE
- Well, I been meanin' to give
- somthin', but I had me some e-
- spenses.
-
- The Judge scribbles a note.
-
- JUDGE
- Okay, boy, I don't want to see you
- back in here again. You see that
- you start providing for these
- youngins.
-
- NATE
- Yes, Judge. I'll do all I can.
-
- Ella's jaw is dropping. Richard looks
confused.
-
- JUDGE
- Alright, then...
-
- The judge hammers his gavel.
-
- JUDGE
- (continuing)
- Next case!
-
- Nate turns to leave.
-
- ELLA
- But my boys are hungry! I ain't
- got no money!
-
- The Judge turns to the bailiff.
-
- JUDGE
- Next case.
-
- The bailiff moves towards Ella. She
turns, gives a start and
- shrinks back from the uniformed white
man. She pulls her
- boys close and starts from the room.
-
- The Judge turns to the court stenographer.
-
- JUDGE
- (continuing; quiet)
- There ain't a buck alive who can
- keep his gun in one holster for
- very long.
-
- The woman smiles.
-
-
-
- EXT. COURTHOUSE STEPS - DAY
-
- Ella walks slowly down the steps with
her boys. At the curb,
- Nate stands taking a pull from a pint
bottle. Ella walks to
- within six feet of her husband and
calls out.
-
- ELLA
- How can you do this to your
- children?
-
- Nate turns to face his family.
-
- NATE
- You got no call to bring the law
- into this.
-
- ELLA
- What else can I do, you're
- starving your children.
-
- NATE
- Shee-it woman! I ain't doin'
- nothin'.
-
- Nate turns and walks away down the
sidewalk. Ella and the
- boys can only watch him leave.
-
-
-
- EXT. WRIGHT HOME - MORNING
-
- The front door opens and Ella exits.
She wears a uniform.
- She could be a cook or a maid. She
walks down the steps and
- trudges off.
-
- After a moment, the door opens again.
It stays open as
- Richard leans against the frame. Leon
walks past Richard
- holding a small ball. He plops down
on the top step.
-
- Richard watches him.
-
- A group of children walk by with school
books under their
- arms. Richard watches them pass, then
turns back to Leon.
-
-
-
- MONTAGE - A WAISTED DAY
-
- A) In the living room, nothing is happening...
nothing.
- Richard sits on the floor, his back
to the wall. He is
- glum, completely bored. Leon is pacing.
He marches back
- and forth, pointlessly. He is a small
animal in a cage.
-
- B) In the kitchen, Richard spreads
what looks like lard over
- a rough chunk of white bread. Leon
sits at the table.
- Richard puts two plates on the table,
one in front of
- Leon. Leon looks up at Richard, like
he might complain,
- but he seems to understand. He takes
a bite and grimaces.
-
- C) Richard and Leon sit on the front
steps. The earlier
- group of children again pass, heading
home, books under
- their arms, talking. Richard watches
them go by.
-
-
-
- EXT. WRIGHT HOME - LATER
-
- It is getting dark. Richard and Leon
still sit. Their heads
- are down.
-
- Unseen by the boys, Ella walks to the
steps. For a moment
- she just watches the boys. She could
be pitying them,
- herself; likely the three of them.
-
- Leon looks up.
-
- LEON
- Mama!
-
- Richard jerks his head up. The boys
run down the steps to
- clutch their mother. She wraps her
arms around them.
-
-
-
- EXT. STREET FRONTING WRIGHT HOME -
DAY
-
- Richard exits the house with an empty
burlap bag and starts
- down the street.
-
-
-
- EXT. CITY STREET NEAR STORE - LATER
-
- Booth's gang is hanging around on a
stoop near a corner. A
- few push and jostle each other. An
older man, who could be
- BOOTH'S FATHER, is at the top of the
stoop, near his front
- door.
-
- The boys spot Richard approaching with
the bag. They pile
- down the steps and encircle Richard.
He's trapped.
-
- Booth's Father watches, smiling.
-
- BOOTH
- Hey Miss-ippi, what ya' doin' with
- the potato bag, nigger?
-
- Richard hesitates.
-
- RICHARD
- Goin' shoppin'.
-
- They boys burst into laughter.
-
- BOOTH
- Shoppin?! Boy, that's woman work!
- You a woman?
-
- Richard's fear is rising.
-
- GANG BOY
- He ain't no woman, he jest a
- little girl.
-
- Richard doesn't know how to answer.
-
- At the top of the steps, Booth's Father,
chuckles approvingly.
-
- BOOTH
- Say boy, if you's goin' shoppin',
- you got some money.
-
- Richard is silent.
-
- BOOTH
- (continuing)
- Gimme that money, boy.
-
- Richard backs away, but a boy behind
pushes him forward.
- Booth pushes him back, another boy
pushes him forward and
- Richard is knocked to the ground.
-
- Laughing and jeering, the boys fall
upon him. Hands tear at
- his pockets. The money is taken. Richard
scrambles up and
- runs for home.
-
-
-
- INT. WRIGHT HOME - LATER
-
- Richard is sitting on the floor, distraught.
-
- The front door opens and Ella, in a
maid's uniform, enters
- with Leon. She closes the door and
sees Richard.
-
- ELLA
- What's the matter?
-
- Richard hesitates.
-
- RICHARD
- Some boys took the grocery money.
-
- ELLA
- What do you mean, boy?
-
- RICHARD
- The boys that are always down by
- the corner. They pushed me down
- and took the money.
-
- Ella just stares for a moment. Then
she marches over to a
- table. She removes a small pouch from
her handbag and counts
- out some money. She walks back to Richard.
-
- ELLA
- Stand up, boy.
-
- Richard gets to his feet. Ella takes
his hand and pushes the
- money into it.
-
- ELLA
- (continuing)
- You get yourself back down there
- and get the shoppin' done.
-
- RICHARD
- But...
-
- ELLA
- No buts. Git.
-
- Richard scrambles from the room.
-
-
-
- EXT. STREET - LATER
-
- Wary, Richard is walking toward the
grocery again. He slows
- and stops. The boys are ahead about
a half-block. Richard
- starts for the other side of the street.
About half-way
- across he's spotted.
-
- GANG BOY
- There he is 'gain!
-
- Richard turns for home and runs. The
boys pursue. A block
- later they catch up with him. Booth
throws a punch and pops
- Richard in the head. He goes down.
-
- The boys laugh as they tear at Richard's
pockets. The money
- is gone again. Richard is pulled up,
slapped and pushed
- away. He runs for home.
-
-
-
- EXT. WRIGHTS' HOME - LATER
-
- Richard starts up the steps. The door
opens and his mother
- is standing above. Richard stops.
-
- RICHARD
- They b-beat m-me...
-
- He starts up the steps again.
-
- ELLA
- Don't you come in here.
-
- Richard freezes.
-
- RICHARD
- B-but they b-beat me up.
-
- ELLA
- (cold)
- You stay right where you are.
- This night I'm going to teach you
- to stand up and fight for yourself!
-
- Ella turns and goes into the house.
Richard stands, dismayed
- and hurt.
-
- A moment later, she returns with more
money and... a hard-
- wood ax handle. She grabs Richard's
hand and puts the money
- in it.
-
- ELLA
- (continuing)
- You take this money and this
- stick...
-
- She places the four-foot stick in his
hand.
-
- ELLA
- (continuing)
- Now go to the store and buy those
- groceries. If those boys bother
- you again, fight.
-
- RICHARD
- But I'm scared.
-
- ELLA
- Don't you come into this house
- until you've gotten those
- groceries.
-
- RICHARD
- But they'll beat me up.
-
- ELLA
- Then stay in the streets! Don't
- come back here!
-
- Richard starts up the steps, trying
to get by his mother.
- She slaps him hard and he freezes;
stunned.
-
- RICHARD
- Please Mama... I don't wanna!
-
- ELLA
- Go now! If you come back into
- this house without those
- groceries, I'll whip you!
-
- Ella turns, enters the house and slams
the door. The lock
- turns.
-
- Richard wobbles down the steps. He
turns, looks once more to
- his home, then starts down the now
darkening street.
-
-
-
- EXT. STREET NEAR STORE - LATER
-
- Richard, carrying the ax handle, heads
to the corner. He is
- afraid, full of energy and loathing.
-
- GANG BOY
- Here he comes again!
-
- The boys shout and whoop and are on
him again, encircling
- him. They start to grab out, like hyenas
at wounded prey.
-
- Richard is afraid, but angry and desperate.
-
- RICHARD
- I'll kill ya!
-
- They laugh and close in. Richard closes
his eyes and lets
- fly with the stick... whoooomph...
crack! The wood connects
- with a skull and a boy screams.
-
- The boys are taken aback, stunned motionless.
Richard swings
- again... whoooomph... crack! Another
boy, Booth, screams and
- falls to the ground.
-
- Richard is crying, but still swinging.
He nails another boy
- in the chest, one across the knee.
The boys back off, now in
- fear of Richard's frenzied state. A
few run.
-
- Richard lands a blow on a shoulder
and the boy screams and
- scurries away. Richard stalks after
those that remain.
-
- RICHARD
- (continuing)
- Come on, you sum-bitches!! I'll
- kill ya'!! I'll kill ya', you try
- to touch me again!!
-
- Richard jumps forward, swings, cracks
a boy in the back as he
- turns to run. Now all the boys are
in flight, running to
- their homes, scrambling around the
corner. Richard is a
- maniac, pursuing Booth to the steps
of his home. The boy
- scrambles inside. Richard pants, sweats,
looks insane.
-
- The front door opens and Booth's Father
steps out. He looks
- down at Richard ten feet away.
-
- FATHER
- What did you do to my boy, you
- little nigger?!
-
- Panting, adrenaline racing, Richard
looks to the larger man
- at the top of the stoop. He readies
the ax handle.
-
- RICHARD
- Go to hell!! You want to do
- somthin' 'bout it, come on!!
-
- Booth's Father stares down at this
crazy, dangerous boy. He
- raises his brow, astonished, even afraid.
-
- BOOTH'S FATHER
- (under his breath)
- That boy's touched.
-
- The man turns, muttering to himself,
and returns to his house.
(continue)
|